Nepalese ring road nears completion
The Nepalese Government is building a 42km long ring road in eastern Nepal at Biratnagar.
Ring road in Turkmenistan
Plans have been revealed for a new ring road project in Turkmenistan.
Russian plans
Russia's Krasnodar region plans to invest heavily in road building projects.
Hungary's huge highway investment strategy
The Hungarian Government is lining up an impressive plan for infrastructure investment in the coming years.
Preformed tapes show the way
Swarco Industries, a division of Swarco America, has unveiled its new wet reflective temporary construction zone tape Director-2 WR.
Italian firms concerned over equipment sales
Data from the Italian construction equipment manufacturer's association (UNACEA) shows that the country's off-highway equipment market was still in recession in the first part of 2011.
Dominican Republic tackling road roughness and safety
Work is now going ahead on the Viadom road construction project in the Dominican Republic.
Nepal plans road improvements
The Nepalese Government looks set to increase its transport budget for the next fiscal year.
Developments in tolling technology
Jason Barnes reviews the last few decades and the future of tolling technology. Tolling and charging technology has evolved significantly over the last three decades and that evolution is perhaps best illustrated by reductions in or complete removal of impedances to physical progress. Once, it was customary for a driver to pull up to a barrier, make some form of cash payment to a human operative in a booth, and then wait for the barrier to be raised before proceeding. Humans were eventually complemented and
Optimised machines improve aggregate production
Improving aggregate production and quality levels is not just about investing in the latest equipment but making sure existing machines are optimised - Claire Symes reports. Although the cost of fuel has dropped since last summer's high, reducing the cost/tonne of production is still high on the agenda for most quarry operators, along with improving quality.
Japan helping Nicaraguan links
The Japanese Government is giving US$30 million towards construction of a new bridge in Nicaragua.
Chinese firm awards sub-contract package in Sri Lanka
A Chinese contractor is awarding sub-contracting work in Sri Lanka on a number of key road projects in Jaffna.
A ‘first' for New Zealand contracting company
Higgins Contractors of New Zealand has made rapid use of its new Borum BMT 350 road marking machine, the first of its type in the country. The machine was bought recently to undertake contract work for the New Zealand Transport Authority and local councils, following a meeting Higgins had with Borum representatives at the Intertraffic exhibition in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, a year ago.
Road and airport deal for Bolivia
A World Bank loan worth US$109 million is paying for an upgrade to the road connecting the Bolivian conurbations of Rurrenabaque and Ixiamas as well as to the airport in Rurrenabaque.
PNG plans infrastructure upgrades
The authorities in Papua New Guinea (PNG) will be able to boost transport infrastructure following the provision of a development assistance grant worth US$371.35 million.
Energy efficient cement testing solution
In determining the mechanical strength of cement, the European Standard EN 196 prescribes both compressive and flexural tests, so when Italian company Tecnotest designed its current generation of cement testing machines, the aim was to obtain highly accurate results over the full scale despite the wide range involved by implementing a dual scale in a single test bay, using load cells as dynamometers.
Key UK tunnel opens
The UK's new Hindhead Tunnel is now open to traffic. The ?420 million (£371 million) tunnel runs under the Devil's Punch Bowl in Surrey and will reduce congestion, while boosting safety on the busy A3 route.
Key Indian links
In India a total of eight road projects worth US$1.43 billion have been given approval by the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI).
My name is…
Police in Ireland have finally managed to find out why a Polish driver who had racked up over 50 separate offences had never been caught. One police officer realised that the name written on the paperwork recording each incident meant driving licence in Polish and that the one driver named was in fact 50 different people. Until that point Irish officers had mistakenly written the words Prawo Jazdy, which is printed on the top of a Polish driving licence as being the name of the offending driver. Despite the
Chile planning road repairs
Chile's Ministry of Public Works (MOP) will re-open highway concessions worth over US$1 billion shortly.